Abrams Seen as Voting-Rights Advocate 11/19 06:16
ATLANTA (AP) -- Stacey Abrams broke the rules of politics until the very end.
The Georgia Democrat who came about 60,000 votes shy of becoming America's
first black female governor refused to follow the traditional script for
defeated politicians who offer gracious congratulations to their victorious
competitor and gently exit the stage. Instead, Abrams took an unapologetically
indignant tone that established her as a leading voting rights advocate.
"I acknowledge that former Secretary of State Brian Kemp will be certified
as the victor in the 2018 gubernatorial election," Abrams said in a fiery
12-minute address. "But to watch an elected official ... baldly pin his hopes
for election on the suppression of the people's democratic right to vote has
been truly appalling."
"So let's be clear," Abrams concluded, "this is not a speech of concession."
Pointedly refusing to concede would typically risk drawing a "sore loser"
label that would be impossible to shake in any future political campaign. But
Democrats and even some Republicans say she is likely to emerge from the
closely fought governor's race with her political future on solid ground.
"There was a time when this may have been a bad look, but I'm not sure
that's where we are in politics anymore," said Jen Palmieri, who served as
communications director for President Barack Obama's White House and for
Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign.
"For many years, people have been too concerned about the optics of their
actions as opposed to the impact of their actions," Palmieri added, saying that
addressing some voters' lack of faith in the system is "more important than
worrying what might offend people who may or may not vote for you four years
from now."
Republican Rick Tyler, a top adviser to Sen. Ted Cruz's 2016 presidential
campaign, said "botched concessions have hurt people before," but he said it's
too simple to say Abrams "botched" anything because some of her criticism has
merit.
"I wish we could all have faith in the system and the process," Tyler said.
"Then we could count votes, listen to gracious concession speeches and all just
move on. That's not where we are."
Abrams cited a litany of problems that she said add up to systemic voter
suppression. She specifically pointed to absentee ballots thrown out by what
she called "the handwriting police," a shortage of paper ballots to back up
broken-down voting machines and Georgia's so-called "exact match" voter
registration rules that require information on voter applications to precisely
match state and federal files.
While state law allows "no viable remedy," she said she plans to file
federal legal action challenging various aspects of the electoral system Kemp
oversaw until he resigned as secretary of state two days after the Nov. 6
election. She also launched the new non-profit group "Fair Fight Georgia" to
advocate for changes.
In an interview Sunday, she confirmed the federal lawsuit would be filed
this week. "We are going to ask the court to use all the legal remedies
possible to force reform in our electoral system," she told The Associated
Press.
Some Republicans rebuked her approach.
"She seems to think there are only two branches of government: executive and
judicial," said Debbie Dooley, a Georgia-based activist who was among the early
national tea party leaders. "I'm just disappointed that her immediate
adversarial response is to file lawsuits when there are a lot of people on the
Republican side who see a need for some of the reforms she wants."
For starters, Dooley cited an absentee ballot process that varies from
county to county and Georgia's reliance on electronic voting machines with no
paper trail --- a system a federal court already has ordered changed after the
2018 elections.
"If they try to do it all through the federal courts, it's going to end up
with people resenting her," Dooley predicted.
In her speech Friday, Abrams said "pundits and hyper-partisans" would object
to her flouting "normal order" for losing candidates. "I should be stoic in my
outrage and silent in my rebuke," she said of conventional expectations. "But
stoicism is a luxury and silence is a weapon for those who would quiet the
voices of the people."
She told AP her goal with Fair Fight Georgia "is to make sure that when the
next campaign happens, there is a clear understanding of what occurred" in her
loss to Kemp.
Georgia Democrats said Abrams has little choice but to continue highlighting
problems.
"The middle ground here is simple: 'Count every vote,'" said Allegra
Lawrence-Hardy, Abrams' campaign chairman.
Buddy Darden, a former congressman who chaired the campaign of Abrams'
Democratic primary rival, agreed. Darden, who is white, said Abrams proved
wrong the "old dinosaurs like me" who thought a black woman couldn't compete in
a general election in the Deep South. "She did it by getting folks out that no
one else could," Darden said. "Now she has their back, and that's a good thing
for the party, a good thing for the state."
Palmieri, the former Obama and Clinton adviser, said Abrams can fill an
important national void. Republicans, she said, have spent a generation focused
on passing GOP-friendly voting rules, redrawing district boundaries and
electing like-minded secretaries of state like Kemp. The left has answered with
a less-effective patchwork of lawyers and think tanks. "She would be a
formidable force on that front," Palmieri said.
Abrams did not say what her next bid for public office would be, but makes
clear she's not bowing out. Her next chance in Georgia would be to challenge
for Republican Sen. David Perdue's seat in 2020.
"My mission is to take a little bit of time to decompress, and then No. 1,
file this lawsuit, get this organization off the ground, get a little bit of
rest and then get to work figuring out what we can do to not only help Georgia
but help the United States," she told the AP.
History offers some parallels.
Democrat Al Gore fell just short of the presidency in 2000 after a U.S.
Supreme Court ruling that affirmed Republican George W. Bush's victory in
Florida. Gore never returned to politics, but he established himself as a
leading advocate for addressing climate change.
Republican Richard Nixon lost a bitter presidential election to John Kennedy
in 1960, then followed with a loss in the 1962 California governor's election,
prompting a bitter concession speech in which he declared himself done with
politics. Six years later, he was elected president, capitalizing on Democrats'
Vietnam-era disarray.
Cruz found himself in Republican crosshairs in 2016 when he spoke at the
Republican convention but notably refused to endorse nominee Donald Trump for
president. Weeks ago, Trump and Cruz embraced on a Texas campaign stage,
helping Cruz to a hard-fought re-election victory to the Senate.
The lesson, Palmieri said, is that "voters let these things play out."
(KA)